Summary

We in the UK don’t get to see all the phones our US counterparts can enjoy. It’s not just because America is so ruddy huge, it’s also because smartphones headed to the states can make use of 4G connectivity, which is not yet established over here. You may not ever see phones like the LTE-powered CDMA LG Spectrum down the local phone shop, but it tells us a lot about the phones we can expect to see from LG into 2012.

Filmed by TrustedReviews using a Canon Legria HF R26 camcorder

In some key respects, the LG Spectrum is one of the most advanced phones we’ve ever seen. It runs a custom version of Android Gingerbread, has a powerful dual-core processor and natty gestural controls. But the really exciting thing about this phone is its screen, which boasts a full 720p resolution spread across 4.5in.

We’ve seen 720p screens before, such as that of the Samsung Galaxy Nexus, but the LG Spectrum uses an IPS-based screen rather than the Super AMOLED type seen in most other top-end mobile screens. Each screen type has its advantages and disadvantages, but this phone has convinced us that IPS might be a better solution all-round. It doesn’t tend to suffer from the colour issues of AMOLED, which often over-saturates colour and becomes cast with a blueish tint when viewed from an angle. IPS doesn’t offer the same awesome black depth and sheer contrast of OLED, but limitations here tend to be less conspicuous than those of AMOLED screens. Apple’s iPhone 4 and 4S use IPS panels, as does the iPad 2, and are the key flagships of the tech. However, the LG Spectrum’s screen is rather more advanced, offering similar pixel density at a significantly larger size. In a word – yum.Given how great the screen is, we were disappointed to see that advancements don’t continue into the LG Spectrum’s software – at present at least. It runs Android 2.3, with LG’s custom UI plastered on top. This interface has a friendly, slightly cartoonish look, but doesn’t have the class of Google’s default Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich UI, and doesn’t make the most of the impressive pixel density of this handset. We’d be surprised if LG didn’t give the Spectrum the boost up to Ice Cream Sandwich at some point, but not fitting it in at this point feels like a missed opportunity.

Another clue that this is a stop-gap phone in some respects is its build. Its 10.4mm shell is plastic, common in slim phones, but the glossy finish doesn’t exactly make the phone feel like a million dollars. A little texture to a phone body, or a concerted effort to make it feel as densely-packed as possible, is needed to make a handset feel like a smartphone superstar. And this one doesn’t quite.